Two readers of this blog left couple of intelligent questions in comment section on some of the articles. Both of these questions relate to what I term as rebalancing the portfolio (or profit booking). I wanted to wait until I posted articles on TIPBlog portfolio update and risk analysis. I wanted to discuss these two questions in the context of TIPBlog portfolio. It will help better understand the re-balancing and profit booking processes.
You may have read earlier post that discusses risk analysis. I made a comment that the portfolio has overexposure on few stocks like ONGC, LNT, etc. I also mentioned that I will not be selling any partial shares to bring down allocation. Many use the term profit booking for partial selling.
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There are many different styles, approach, and methods of investing. Many individual investors focus on trading (swing, positional, momentum, speculation, technicals etc.), while many others focus of investing (value, growth, blend, etc), and still many others on special situations (opportunistic, arbitrages, etc). In addition, there are quite a few individual investors that attempt at combination of trading and investing. Similar to glass being half full or half empty, I believe every style has its own pros and cons’ depending upon in what context one is looking at it. Individuals have to figure out what works best for them.
Readers are already accustomed to my approach of dividend investing. I am a long term buy and hold investor and prefer to buy my positions at fair values (fair value calculation methodology). The reason I use fair value is because, I do have enough expertise to determine the tangible book value. While I still use book value based on Graham’s method, it is not the only one on which I base my decision.
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I use Beta-based expected return to calculate and understand potential capital appreciate (or cash flow) from a given stock.
In today’s post, I am discussing the concept of stock’s beta value and how it helps us understand stocks expected returns.
What is Stock’s Beta Value?
In its simplistic form, beta is a measure of any individual stock’s risk (or movement) relative to the overall stock market risk (or movement). I measure Beta of any given stock relative to the S&P CNX NIFTY. Here, I am trying to understand how a stock price behaves relative to the market and how to factor in the capital appreciation into my expected returns. We can calculate Beta either using daily return (i.e. daily pricing) or on monthly returns (monthly pricing). The results should be the same because it is the on relative basis. Continue reading rest of this article…
How to Execute Asset Allocation – Yale Fund Example
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